The Chesterfield advertiser. [volume] (Chesterfield C.H., S.C.) 1884-1978, April 20, 1922, Image 3
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Copyriqht" by EdwirvBalmer^
(Continued from last week)
The fact that this other man ,
searched also did not prove that Benjamin
Corvet had left "h record In the
house, as Sherrlll believed; but It
certainly showed that another person
believed?or feared?It. Whether or
not guilt had Bent Benjamin Corvet
away four days ago, whether or not
there had been guilt behind the ghost
which had "got Ben," there was guilt
40 an In the big man's superstitious terror
.{j B when he had seen Alan." A bold, pow>.
M erful man like that one, when his confl
science Is clear, does not see a ghost.
And the ghost which he had seen had
a bullet hole above the brows!
S Alan took up his hat and looked
about the house; he was going to ref
turn and sleep here, of course; he was
I not going to leave the house unguarded
for any long time after this, but,
after what had Just happened, lie felt
he could leave It safely for half an
hour, particularly If he left a light
burning within.
Hfe did this and stepped over to the
Sherrllls'. The man who answered his
r~- ring recognized him at once and admitted
him; In reply to Alan's ques- i
tlon, the servant said that Mr. Sherrlll <
had not yet returned. When Alan
went to his room, the valet appeared |
and, finding that Alan was packing,
the man offered his service. Alan let
I him pack and went downstairs; a mo- I
tor hnd Insf driven tin *? ? ?iir? I
It proved to have brought Constance
and her mother; Mrs. Sherrill, after
Informing Alnn tliut Mr. Sherrill might
not return until some time later, went
*You'ra Not Staying Hare Tonight?" |
She Asked.
upstairs and dkl not appear again. 1
Constance foHowed hor mother but,
ten minutes later, came downstairs.
"You're not staying here tonight?"
she asked.
"I wanted to say to your father,"
Alan explained, "that I believe I had
better go over to the other house."
"Are you taking any one'with you?"
she inquired.
"Any one?"
"A servant, I mean."
"No."
"Then you'll let us lend you a man
?rom here."
"You're awfully good; but I don't
think I'll need anyone tonight. Mr.
Corvet's?my father's mnn?is coining
back tomorrow, I understand. I'll get
along very well until then."
She was silent a moment as she
looked away. Her shoulders suddenly
Jerked a little. "1 wish you'd tuke
some one with you," she persisted. "I !
don't like to think of you alone over
there."
"My father must have been often
alone there."
"Yes," she said. "Yes." She looked
at him quickly, then away, cheeking a
question. She wanted to ask. he knew,
what he had discovered In that lonely
house which hud so agitated him ; for
of course she had noticed agitation in
htm Anil hn hnii lnt?>n<l?.il i.. ?..n ?.??
or, rather, her father. He had been
rehearsing to himself the description
of the mon lie had met there In order
to ask Sherrlll about him ; hut now
Alan knew that he was not going to
refer the matter even to Sherrlll Just
yet.
Sherrlll had believed that Benjamin
Corvet's disappearance was from circumstances
too (icrsonal and Intimate
to be made a subject of public Inquiry:
and wbrt Ainu had encountered In
Corvefa house had confirmed that be
lief. S!?rrlll forth** had said that
ttetijuuiin (Jorvet, if ho had wished
Sherrlll to know those i-lrcuuininuceH,
would have told them to him; Lut <'-?rtet
bad not done that; instead, he had
ent for Alan, his boii. lie hull given
his son his confidence.
Sherrlll had admitted that be was
withholding from Alan, for the time
being, something that he knew about
Benjamin Corvet; it was nothing, lie
had said, which would help Alan to
learn about his father, or what laid
become of him; but perhaps Sherrlll,
not knowing these other things, could
not speak accurately as to thut. Alan
datarmlned to ask Sherrlll "what he
had been withholding, before he toid
him all of what bad happened In Corentfn
bouse. There was one other clr mtuM
which Sherrlll bad men
"What is it?"
"This afternoon your father said
that you believed that Mr. Curvet's
disappearance was In some way connected
witli you; he said that he did
not think thut was so; hut do you
want to tell ine why you thought It?"
"Yes; I will tell you." She colored
quickly. "One of the last things Mr.
Corvet did?in fact, the last thing we
know of his doing before he sent for
you?was to come to me and warn me
against one of my friends."
--warn you, Miss iSherrill? How? I 1
meun, warn you against what?"
"Against thinking too much of lilin."
She t.urned away.
"I think I'll come to see your father
In the morning," Alan said, when Constance
looked hack to him.
"Hut you'll coine over here for
brenkfnst In the morning?"
"You want me?"
"Certainly."
"I'd like to come very much."
"Then I'll expect you." She followed
him to the door when he had put on
his things, and he made no objection
when she asked that the man he allowed
to rnrry his hag around to 'the
other house.
When he had dismissed Simons and
re-entered tlie house on Astor street,
he found no evidences of any disturbance
while he had been gone. On the
second floor, to the east of the room
which had been his father's, was a
bedroom which evidently had been
kept as a guest chamber; Alan carried
his suitcase there and made ready for
bed.
The sight of Constance Shorrill
standing and watching after him in
concern as he started back to this
house, came to him again ami again
and, also, her flush when she had
spoken of the frivnd against whom
Benjamin Corvet had warned her.
Who was he? It had been impossible
nt that moment for Alan to ask her |
more; besides, if he had asked and site i
had told him,- he would have learned
only a name which he could ifot place
111 mi%v riMiiin'iiini ?iin ii?*r fir wiiii
Benjamin Oorvpf Whoever he was. It
wps plain that Constance Sherrill
"thought of him;" lucky innn, Alan
Raid to himself. Yet Corvet had
warned her not to think of him. . . .
Alan turned buck his bed. It had
been for him u tremendous day. Barely
twelve hoars before he had come to
that house, Alan Conrad from Blue
Itaplds, Kan., now . . . phrases
from what Lawrence Kherrill had told
him of Ids father were running
through his mind as he opened the
door of the room to he able to hear
any noise In Benjamin Corvet's house,
of which he was sole protector. The
emotion roused by his first sight of the
lake went through him again as he
opened the window to the east.
Now?he was in bed?he seemed to I
be standing, a specter before u man
blaspheming Benjamin Oorvet and the
souls of men dead. "And the h>le
above the eye! . . . The bullet got
you ! ... So It's you that got Ben !
. . . I'll get you! . . . You can't
save the Mlwuka!" ;
The Mlwakn ! The stir of that name '
was stronger now even tliMn before; It
had been running through his consciousness
almost constantly since he
hnd heard it. He Jumped up and
turned on the light and found a pencil.
He did not know how to spell the
name and It was not necessary to
write It down; the name had taken on
that deflnlteness and IneffHceahleness
of a thing which, once heard, can
never again he forgotten." But, In
panic that he might forget, he wrote
It, guessing at the spelling?"Mlwakn."
It was a name, of course; but the
name or want t it repeated aim repeated
Itself to him, after he got back
Into bed, until Its very Iteration made
him drowsy.
Outside, the *ale whistled nhd
shrieked. The wind, passing Its last
resistance nfter Its sweep across the
prairies before It leaped upon the lake,
battered and clamored In Its assault
ab( ut the house. Hut as Alan became
sleepier, he heard It no longer as it
rattled the windows and howled under
the eaves and over the roof, but as out
on the lake, above the roaring and Icecrunching
waves. It whipped and circled
with Its chill the Ice-shrouded
sides of struggling ships. So, with the
roar of surf and gale In his ears, ho
went to sleep with the sole conscious
connection In his mind between himself
and these people, among whom
Henjnmin Corvet's summons had
brought him, the one name "Mlwaka."
CHAPTER VI.
The Deed In Trust.
Memory, If Alan could call It that,
had given him n feeling for ships and
for the lake. Rut those reeollectlons
were only what those of n three-years'
child might have been. Not only did
they refuse to connect themselves with
anything else, but by the very finality
or rneir isolation, tnov warned Dim
that the>?a ad porhnps n few more
vague memories of similar s.^rt?weiv
all that recollect Inn ever would give
lilnT lie caught himself together ami
turned his thoughts to the approaching
visit to Hherrlil?and his father's
ofllces. He had accepted Constance
Sherrlll's Invitation to drive him
downtown to his destination.
Observing the towering buildings to
his right, he was able to Identify some
of the more prominent structures, funiillar
from photogruphs of the city.
Constance drove awlftly a few blocks
down this boulevard; then, with
sudden, "Here we erel" she shot the
mmuaUm
the wide nmrbie hull where the elevator
left theiu,- Alan saw the names,
"Corvet, Sherrill and Spearman."
Constance led the way on past to a .
door farther down the corridor, which
bore merely the name, "Lawrence
Sherrill"; evidently Sherrill. who had
interests aside from the shipping business,
had olllces connected with but
not actually a part of the otllces of
Corvet, Sherrill and Spearman. A girl
on guard at the door, saying that Mr.
Sherrill hud been awaiting Mr. Conrad,
opened an inner door and led
Alan into a large, many-windowed
room, where Sherrill was sitting alone j
before a table-desk. He pulled the
"visitor's chair" rather close to his
desk and to hi9 own big leather chair
before asking Alan to seat himself.
"You wanted to tell me, or ask me,
something last night, my daughter has
told me," Sherrill said cordially. "I'm >
sorry I wasn't home when you curne
back." |
"I wanted to ask you, Mr. Sherrill,"
Alan said, "about those facts in regard
to Mr. Corvet which you mentioned
to me yesterday but did not explain.
You said It would not uld me to
know them ; hut I found certain things
In Mr. Curvet's house last night which
made me want to know, if I could,
everything you could tell me."
Sherrlll opened u drawer and took
out n large, plain envelope.
"On the day ufter your father disappeared."
he said, "but before I knew '
he was gone?or before any one except !
iny daughter felt any alariu about him
HBK&nB ww
Sherrill Opened a Drawer and Took
Out a Large. Plain Envelope.
?I received a short note from him.
The note was ar'iinled, almost incoherent.
It told me lie had sent for you?
Alail Con.ad. of Kill " Kami's Kansas
?but spoke of yon ns though y<?u wore
sonic oin- I ought to liiivo known aliout,
and commended you to m\ rare. The
remainder of It was merely an imitated,
almost IndoHjilmrnMo farowe'l to
we. Wlieu I opened tlu? envelope, a
key had fallen out. The note made
no reference to the key, but, comparing
It with one I had In my pocket, I
saw thut it appeared to he a key to a
safety deposit box in the vaults of a
company where we hoth had boxes.
"The note, taken in connection with
my daughter's alarm about him, made
tt so plain that something serious laid
happened to Corvet, that my first
thought was merely for him. Corvet
was not a man with whom one could
readily connect the thought of suicide;
but, Alan, that was the idea I had. I
bunded at once to his house, but the
bell was not answered, and I could not
got in. His servant, Wussaquani, has
very few friends, and the few times he
lias been away from home of recent
years have been wlieu he visited an
acquaintance of hi*?the head porter
in a South Side hotel. I went to the
telephone in the house next cloor and
called the hotel and found Wassaquum
there. I told liitn over the telephone
only that something was wrong, and
hurried to my own home to get the
key, wldch I had, to the Corvet house;
hut when I came hack and let myself
Into the house I tnnnil it .....i
with no sign of anything having happened.
"The next morning. Alan, I went to
the safe deposit vaults as soon as they
were open. I presented the numhered
key and was told that it belonged to a
box rented by Corvet, and thnt t'orvet
hnd nrranged about three days before
for ine to have access to the box If I
presented the key. 1 had only to sign
my name in their hook and open the
box. In it. Alan. I found the pictures
of you which I showed you yesterday
and the very strange communications
that I am going to s'.uav you now."
Sherrlll opened the long envelope,
from which several thin folded papers
fell, lie pieke I nf- the iareevt of these,
which consisted of several sheets
fasirne** toge hot with a clip, and
handed it to Ainti without comment.
Alan, as he be" i it it an I turned the
pates, saw that it on niued lao < altiiiin.s
of f> i wiping carried from pag?
to page alicr tin* manner of an account.
The column io tin; left was an inven- J
tory of pr. p ily and profits and hi
| .come by months ami years, mid the
one to (lie li'-jlit was u list of losses
| and expenditures. Beginning at an in*
definite day or nnintli in the year 1 M>">,
there was set down in a lump sum
wlial was indicated as the total of HenJan.ni
t'ofvet's ho'dings at iliat time.
To tills, ill si'inetlines undated items,
the ineretise had heeii added. In tlie
o|i|iosite column, beginning apparently
from the same ila'e in 1 >??."?, were the
missing man's ex; i ndifitres.
Alan 1 .ivin ascertained that the papers
contained only this account,
looked up qunsDniihigly to Sherrill;
hut Sherrill, without spra'dng, merely
hunded htm (lie second of the papers.
Alan unfolded it and saw Dial it was
a letter written in tin* same hand
which iiail written Die summons lie
had received in lilue Itapids and had
made the cutrles in the little memorandum
book of tlie remittances that
had been sent to John Welton.
It began simply:
"Lawrence?
"This will come to you In the event
that I am not able to carry out tha
eept for recording of t ^ transfer ut i
the county office; bo ^ . certificates,
mill other .documents . eseming my
ownership of properth j. ojrether with
signed tort 's for tlie Mgul transfer j
to J oil, uiv n :!i;s box ?I: e p; >per- 1
ties. In tl ir erJrety, ; ve to you in |
tri st to hob! f r the ; < ug r an now |
known us Ainu Conrn : f Mine Hap- ,
Ids. Kan., to deliver uiv part < r all
over to hint or to eon s e to hold It
all in trust for him as v u shall conalder
to lie to his gren advantage.
"Tills for the reasons hleh I shall
have to'd to you or Mm?1 en 11 not ;
know which one of you w, nor do I j
know how I shall tel But when
you learn. Lawrence, t '< hs well of
me as you can nnd I ';> hlni to ba
charitable to nie. 1
"With the greatest r tlnn,
"REN.FAM1 ORVET."
Alan, us lie finished .? -ding, looked
up to Sherrill, bewlldc and dazed.
"What does It lucun, .M.. SherrillV?
Does It mean that he ha i gone away
and left everything he 1 .id?everything
to me?"
"If Air. Corvet does i o' return, and
I do not receive any of! i instructions,
I shall take over his c a.e, as lie lias
Instructed, for your a-.stage."
"And, Air. Sherrill, he ' In't lell you
why? Tills is all you i \v?"
"Yes; you have everj ' ig now. All
we can do, Alan, Is to ...ch for him
In every way we cau. . uere will be 1
oiuer!) searching for hi: i too now; for
information of kls ?li> ;?; "uniiice has ,
got out. There liuve Ik . r. reporters at
the office this niorui ; making hi- i
(juirles, and tils dlsupp atance will be 1
In tin* afternoon papers."
Sherrill put tlie pupe. . uck in their |
envelope, and the env?' ? back into ,
the (lruwer, which lie ivi eked.
"I went over all tills \ '.ii Mr. Spearman
tills morning," lie : .ill. "lie is as !
much at u loss to explr i it as I am."
He was silent for a i moments.
"The transfer of Mr. t orvet's properties
to me for you," 1 .-aid suddenly,
"includes, us you lur e seen, Curvet's
interest in tlie 1, in of 'Corvet,
Sberrill & Spearman.' I went very
carefully through the d< ds and transfers
in tlie deposit b< >:. and it was
plain that, while lie li:-.,! aken great
care willi the forms of . . i.sfer for ail
tlie properties, he had t; n particular
paius with wluite\er i ted to liis
holdings in this company and to his
shipping interests. If I evike over the
properties ?o you. Alan. . shall begin
with those; for it see . to me that
your fattier was parti ;! rl.v anxious
that you should take a personal as
well as a financial pi; among the
men who control the tr.ifUe of the
lakes. 1 have told Xpe:. ;n that this
Is my iutentioh. He iia not been aide
to see it my way as y< ; but lie may
change his views. I tilli k. after meeting
you."
Siierriii got up. Abu. ...osc a little
unsteadily. The list <u properties he
had read and the lettei ;?,.d Sherrill's
statement portended si .nuch that its
meaning could not all < .c.:e to him al
once. He followed tile ill through a
short private corridor, bunked with
files lettered "Corvet, Siierrlll, and
Spearman," into the lur; " room he had
seen when lie eanie in \.!tii Constance.
They crossed fills, and >i errill, without
knocking, opened t: e door of tlie i
otlice marked, "Mr. Sp< .r. ian." Alan,
looking on past Sherrill as the door
opened, saw that there v. ?.e some half
do/.eti men in tlie room, moking and
talking. His gaze went sv. ftly on past
tliese men to tlie one win . half seated
on iiiu i<>|> or me Hat -it <, had been
talking to them; and his pulse closed
upon his heart with n s: < k; he started,
choked with astot '<hmeut, then
swiftly forced himself under control.
For tills was the man vliom he had
met and whom ho had ' titrht in Benjamin
C'orvet's house tl night before
?the hlg man surprls d in his blasphemy
of Curvet and of - nils "in h?1"
who, at sight of an apparition with a
bullet hole above its eye. had cried out
in his fright, "You got I '-en! Rut you
won't get me?d?n you! D?n you!"
Alan's shoulders drt v up slightly,
and the muscles of h : l ands tightened,
as SherrlU led him to this inao.
Sherrlli put his hand on the man's
shoulder; his other hand was still on
Alan's arm.
"Henry," he said to ih:> man, "this
Is Alan Coorad. Alan I want you to
know n<y partner, Mr. Spearman."
Spearman nodded in acknowledgment,
but did not put ont his hand;
his eyes?steady, bold watchful' eyeg
-^seemed measuring Alan attentively;
and In return Aluu, witli Ids guze, wai
measuring him.
CHAPTER VII.
Mr. Corvat's Partner.
The lnstnnt of meeting, when Alan
recognized in SherrlU's partner, the
man with whom lie had fought In Corvet's
house, was one of swift readjustment
of all his tnought?adjustment
to a situation of which he could not
even have dreamed, and which left,
him breathless. Hut for Spearman,
obviously, it was not that. Following
his noncommittal nod of acknowledgment
of SherrlU's Introduction and his
first steady scrutiny of Alun, the big.
handsome man swung idmself off from
M'mmsr i
Steady, Bold, Watchful Kyaa Soomod
M Mauri ng Alan Attentively.
tone was hearty ; In It Alan could recognize
only so much of reserve us
might be expected from Sherrlll's
partner who hud token an attitude of
opposition. The shipmasters, looking
on, could see, no doubt, not even that;
except for the excitement which Alan
himself could not conceal. It must appear
to them only un ordinary introduction.
Alan fought sharply down the swift
rush of his blood and the tightening of
his muscles.
"I can say truly that I'm glnd to
meet you, Mr. Spearman," he managed.
There was no recognition of anything
beyond the mere surface meaning
of the words In Spearman's slow
smile of acknowledgment, as he turned
from Alan to Sherrlll.
"I'm afraid you've taken rather a
bad time, Lawrence. Can't we get together
later?this afternoon? You'll
be about here this afternoon?"
"I think I can be here this afternoon."
Aluy said.
"Let's wy two-thirty, then." Spearmau
ttirned and noted the hour almost
solicitously among the scruwled appointments
on his desk pad; straightening,
after this act of dismissal, he
walked with them to the door, his
hand on Sherrlll's shoulder.
v-ircumstunces nave put us?Mr.
Sherrill and myself?In a very dlflirult
position, Conrad," he remarked.
"We want much to be fair to all concerned?"
He did not finish the sentence, but
halted at the door. Sherrill went out,
and Alan followed him; exasperation
?half outrage yet half admiration?ut
Spcurman'8 bearing, held Alan speechless.
If every movement of Spearman's
great, handsome body had not
recalled to him their struggle of the
night before?if, us Spearman's hand
rested cordially on Sherrill's shoulder,
Alan had not seemed to feel again that
big hand at his throat?he would almost
have been ready to believe that
this was not the man whom he had
fought. Hut he could not doubt that ;
he hud recognized Spearman beyond
question. And Spearman had recognized
him?lie was sure of that; he
could not for an instant doubt it;
Spearman had known it was Alan
whom he had fought In Corvet's house
even before Sherrill hud brought them
together. Was there not further proof
of that iu Spearman's subsequent manner
toward hltnV l,-or what was all
this cordiality except defiance?
Power and possession?both far exceeding
Alan's most extravagant
uream?were promised him.by those
papers which Sherrill had shown him.
When lie had read down the list of
iliose properties, be laid had no more
feeling that such things could he his
tliuti lie hud hud at first that Corvet's
liiuise could l?e his?until lie hud heard
the Intruder moving in that house.
And now It was tlm sense that another
was going to make him fight for those
properties that was bringing t<> him
the realization of his new power, lie
"bad" something <>n tint man?on
Spearman, lie did not know what thai
thing was; no stretch of his thought, j
nothing that lie knew a >out himself I
or others, could tell him; but, aL sight |
!>! mm, in me Uiirl; <>l Corvet's hnusc,
Spearman had fried eut In horror, lie
had screamed at him tlit name of u j
(Continued on last page) 1
ADVERTISEMENT
RELATING TO LOST POLICIES
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
Notice is hereby given that Cotton
Certificates Nos. *1,188 to 4,200 inclusive,
(open policy 2,413) of toe
Colonial Fire Underwriters, Grant h
ol' National Fire Ins. Co., of Hartford,
requiring for their validity the
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and licensed agent, have been lo.-.t.
Since these policies have not been
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for, nor any premiums received
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they will be valuless and void in the
hands of whomsoever they may fall
and any claim thereunder would he
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should be returned to the ofiico of the
Company at Columbia, S. C. No claim
any of nature purporting to be based
upon them will be recognized by the
Company. The public will please take
notice accordingly.
Colonial Fire Underwriters,
Branch of National Fire Insurance
Co., of Hartford.
By Seibels, Bruce & Co.
General Agents.
n T ir..?L... r 1 4 ^
?? . . 1 JUI'U 1 /\ ^1*111,
Chesterfield, S. C. 4t-18
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] weak, nervous, and headachy?take ;
Gude's Pepto-mangan and restore j
your good health. Thousands have s
I been helped back to health by it?
, you can be benefitted if you will ac- '
oept this truth and act now. Sold in (
both liquid and tablet form. ?Adv.
COUNTY TA>
> State
Ordinary County
Roads
Bridges
Total
I
I
Cheraw
Marburg
Orange Hill . .
Pats Branch
Pee Dee
Stafford
Bethel
Center Point
Chesterfield
Parker .
Pine Grove
Kuby
hiloh . .
Snow Ilill
Stafford
Vaughun
Wamble Ilill
Black Creek
Center
Center Grove
Cross Roads
Mt. Croglmn
Ruby
I Wexford
| Winzo
Zion
Buffalo
Dudley
Five Forks
' Mangum
I Pageland
| Plains
I Zion
! Angel us
j Center Grove
i Clarks
j Jefferson
Macedonia
Plains
| Bay Springs
! Green Hill .
i Lcland
; Middendorf
! Me Bee
i Providence
i sandy KUII
i Union
bay Springs
bear Creek . .
bethesda
Juniper
Middendorf
Patrick
Pats brunch Branch
Shiloh
Stafford
| White Oak
Cat Pond
Juniper
Ousley
Patrick ?
>aclw d air-tight in tlid 1
con oilier?the quality -M
> fhe next time. Clean
^>v I
SS&ft-'H .'. -V . -.1
^' _ J
r : NOTICE
OF ESTATE SALE
By virtue of an Order granted by
he Probate Court of Chesterfield
bounty, 1 will offer for sale to the
lighcst bidder for cash, on Thursday,
20th day of April, 1U22, beginning at
1 1 o'clock A. M., at Porter's Stables,
til the personal property of said esatc,
except accounts and other evtlences
of debt, and the said proner,y
consists or Small lot of corn and
-ay, lot of new leather collars, lot of
loth collars, "JO or more sets new single
buguy harness, lot of plow line,
)Uggy whips, breast collars, side
.traps, second hand ruber tiro bugfies,
lot of bri ib ,18 new rubber tire
op bug-vie s, second hand wagons, one
forel Coupe, one Dort Automobile,
3reak cart and harness. 5 mules and
tor os. lot of fanning tools, laprobes
tnd many other articles of personal
<reporty which will be exhibited at
aid sale.
J. C. Rivers, Administrator.
jGOD MILCH COWS?Will sell,
swap or buy. .1. M. liedfearn.
C LEVY 1921
, 12 mills
(> mills
t) mill!?
I mill
28 mills
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